4. The artist is not that type of artist (you know, the type that makes you want to retrace your steps and cross the other side of the room to avoid having to bump into him). He’s an anime and video games geek who chugs down beer, wears pajamas and worships action figures, just like you. (Well, except that he draws 20-foot high mastodons and vikings and scenes of death, gore and rampage on a regular basis).

5. You can completely get away with making loud, exploding battleship sound effects in here, or those cyborg ray gun impersonations you love doing under your breath. It’s highly possible that everyone else will be doing so, too.

6. The exhibit is everything you’ve always wanted to see in an art gallery: jurassic landscapes, gods of doom, nuclear explosions, robot squids, robot squads, corpses, and lots of about-to-be-corpses–like all your favorite comic books from the best years of your life put together.

7. The show has no concept of time, space, or matter. It is a portal to the 5th dimension, a gateway to that of which remains radically unknown.